Abstract
ABSTRACTSelf-replication of amyloid fibrils via secondary nucleation is an intriguing physicochemical phenomenon in which existing fibrils catalyse the formation of their own copies. The molecular events behind this fibril surface-mediated process remain largely inaccessible to current structural and imaging techniques. Using statistical mechanics, computer modelling, and chemical kinetics, we show that the catalytic structure of the fibril surface can be inferred from the aggregation behaviour in the presence and absence of a fibril-binding inhibitor. We apply our approach to the case of Alzheimer’s Aβ42amyloid fibrils formed in the presence of proSP-C Brichos inhibitors. We find that self-replication of Aβ42fibrils occurs on small catalytic sites on the fibril surface, which are far apart from each other, and each of which can be covered by a single Brichos inhibitor.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory